The wonder woman of wit had a whole lot to write about, and here’s the trivia to prove it:

1. She grew up in a house where a pen was the hottest commodity.

Nora was the eldest of four daughters born to east-coast Jewish parents, screenwriters Henry and Phoebe Ephron. Like Nora, middle sisters Delia and Amy Ephron followed suit, while youngest sister Hallie Ephron became a journalist, book reviewer, and crime-fiction novelist.

2. Her tumultuous saga of marriages led to success on the silver screen.

For many years, Ephron was among only a handful of people in the world who knew that Mark Felt was the true identity of Deep Throat, a key source of information integral to exposing the misdeeds of the Nixon administration. Deep Throat was first introduced to the public in the 1974 book-turned-film “All the President’s Men,” co-authored by her ex-husband Carl Bernstein.

4. Her legacy lives on.

Eight months after her death on June 26, 2012, Ephron’s play “Lucky Guy” opened on Broadway for a limited run starring her longtime friend Tom Hanks. She was honored this year with a posthumous Tony Award nomination for the show.